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A. Was & Were
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B. Have & Has
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C. Is & am
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D. Since & For
Explanation
The preposition since is used to show point of time e.g. Since 2015, Since May etc.
The preposition for is used to show period of time e.g. For 3 days, For one hour etc.
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A. None of the above
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B. Getting up
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C. Got up
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D. Get up
Explanation
Generally first form of verb is used with Did.
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A. They discusses the issue tomorrow
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B. They will discussed the issue tomorrow
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C. They will discuss the issue tomorrow
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D. None of these
Explanation
"Will discuss" is the correct future tense form.
It properly indicates a planned action happening tomorrow.
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A. I and Johan are going to the party
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B. Me and John are going to the party
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C. John and me are going to the party
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D. John and I are going to the party
Explanation
grammatically correct: John and I are going to the party
” Using “I” is perfectly correct here, as John and I are the people who “are going to party”
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A. With the vial set inside the fly box, all the fly could be put to sleep in seconds
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B. With the vial set inside the fly box, all the flies could be putting to sleep within seconds
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C. With the vial set inside the fly box, all the flies could be put to sleep within seconds
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D. With the vial settled inside the fly box, all the flies could be put to sleep within seconds
Explanation
With the vial set inside the fly box, all the flies could be put to sleep within seconds
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"Set" is the correct past participle (not "settled") for passive construction.
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"Flies" is the correct plural of "fly."
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"Could be put to sleep" is the correct passive form.
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"Within seconds" is correct and natural English.
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A. Direct objective
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B. Subject
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C. Indirect objective
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D. Adjective
Explanation
A direct object is a word or phrase that receives the action of the verb.
The students eat cake,
the direct object is cake; the word eat is the verb and cake is what's being eaten.
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A. of
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B. off
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C. away
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D. In
Explanation
Keep away is a phrasal verb which means دور رہنا
Kept is the second form of keep.
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A. Present Indefinite
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B. Past perfect
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C. Future Tense
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D. Past Indefinite
Explanation
Begin is a verb which means start.
The second form of the verb begin is began while the third form of the verb begin is begun.
Second form of the verb is used in past indefinite tense (in simple sentences)
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A. Join
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B. Right
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C. Left
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D. None
Explanation
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A. of
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B. With
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C. Without
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D. By
Explanation
The correct phrase is "She walked in without knocking".
"Without" indicates the absence of the action of knocking.
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